TranceAddict Forums

TranceAddict Forums (www.tranceaddict.com/forums)
- Chill Out Room
-- 2017's words that can f%ck right off
Pages (6): « 1 2 [3] 4 5 6 »


Posted by wotyzoid on Feb-04-2017 00:43:

That's part of what I'm saying, but what the guy that wrote that totally dismisses is that there are intrinsic links between trump's base and the nationalist sentiments in europe prior to WWII. Whether or not the US is a super power and Italy and Germany were broke and fucked, is irrelevant if his base shares the same type of shame, fear, hate. In this case it's not about what actually is right now, but what is, or was, implied for the future. Fake it 'till you make it.


Posted by wotyzoid on Feb-04-2017 00:52:

"Our country is a laughingstock"

"All over the world, they're laughing"


Posted by Lews on Feb-04-2017 11:23:

quote:
Originally posted by Lira
Is it a Bannon thing, or has he given signs he's more community-oriented now? His cabinet is a mess, ideologically, as far as I remember (feel free to correct me if I'm wrong), with nutcases lumped together with ordinary generals and CEO, so I may have missed a more "community"-oriented turn.


In a lot of things I've read about Bannon, he seems to be extremely concerned about 'white civilisation' and the Western-Christian'way of life,' much more so than he is concerned about any sort of individualism.

Obviously the question of if Trump is a fascist is a difficult one to answer, which seems to indicate the answer is no, but I wouldn't be so glib to dismiss the label. We can argue about how exactly his administration is different than the Nazi's and PNF, but there are extremely worrying tendencies linking them all.


Posted by Lews on Feb-04-2017 11:43:

quote:
Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
That's the only difference between "cultural appropriation" and regular globalisation. I generally feel that "cultural appropriation" is often just a load of angry bollocks, wielded by people who are irate about white privilege and don't like white people doing what every culture does to every other culture in the 21st century.

There are arguably more subtle distinctions though; for example, what Edward Said dubbed "Orientalism". The West has a way of viewing the entirety of Asian culture as some interchangeable Eastern exoticism, squashing countless distinct cultures down into simplistic and insulting notions of mysticisim and spirituality. Although Said wrote this specifically about Asia, in practise it can apply to anything percieved "non-Western", from African to Aborigean to Native American cultural artefacts.


The great thing about that, of course, being that Said was just as guilty of a form of 'Westernism', making it too into a monolithic culture.

quote:
Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
All this can overlap at times with cultural appropriation, but I would consider it distinct because the offence is not the appropriation so much as the attitude towards another culture. What is charged as cultural appropriation is very often just ignorance; cultural flotsam washing up on distant shores and being picked up by locals who have no real idea or interest in what it originally constituted. That's not racist as such, whereas the ideological flattening of cultural depth to fit with lingering colonial preconceptions very arguably is.


Agree with the 'attitute' part. Cultural appropriation only gets bad, as usual, when the appropriator sees the appropriated as not a real being, or as not being worthy of respect. I do think that when people start to take things completely out of their context and use it in a completely different way, we start to get into worrying areas - eg the aforementioned drunk white girls at festivals wearing Native American religious headwear.


Posted by Lira on Feb-05-2017 01:21:

quote:
Originally posted by Lews
In a lot of things I've read about Bannon, he seems to be extremely concerned about 'white civilisation' and the Western-Christian'way of life,' much more so than he is concerned about any sort of individualism.

Obviously the question of if Trump is a fascist is a difficult one to answer, which seems to indicate the answer is no, but I wouldn't be so glib to dismiss the label. We can argue about how exactly his administration is different than the Nazi's and PNF, but there are extremely worrying tendencies linking them all.

It's not glibness, it's caution. Shouting "fascist" is a lot like "crying wolf". Do it too much, and you may regret it later.

God forbid someone closer to the definition ever rises to power in the US, but this is why I'm so reluctant to use the f-word in this case.


Posted by wotyzoid on Feb-06-2017 05:48:

quote:
Originally posted by Lira
It's not glibness, it's caution. Shouting "fascist" is a lot like "crying wolf". Do it too much, and you may regret it later.


This argument is also still not airtight, Marcus, because nobody called Romney a fascist. And, also, Bill is totally clueless about one thing. He says Romney wouldn't have changed our lives that much but how the fuck does he know? Good at his job ad he is, he still lives in a hollywood bubble, and it seems like he forgets that Trump's policies are what the GOP have been pushing for, for years now. If you bring up the environment for starters, another 4 years of GOP polute and cash in politics, whether it was under Trump or Romney, could, and I think will, have serious, irreparable effects if you ask me. Seriously, who knows what happens now?


Posted by Lews on Feb-06-2017 09:30:

quote:
Originally posted by Lira
It's not glibness, it's caution. Shouting "fascist" is a lot like "crying wolf". Do it too much, and you may regret it later.

God forbid someone closer to the definition ever rises to power in the US, but this is why I'm so reluctant to use the f-word in this case.


Perhaps glib was not the best word, but I think you're being too quick to dismiss. The whole point about the 'crying wolf' story is that the boy was purposefully messing around with the adults and so of course they weren't going to take him seriously when he was being serious; this isn't a like situation - this is adults looking at a blurry shape in the distance that certainly appears to have a lot of fur and to be menacing sheep, and saying that it really looks like its a wolf, and perhaps we should be wary.

I do think we should be careful about labels and words - I find it hilariously ironic and sad that it appears the Conservatives have made Socialism a more attractive option in America, because they used the term to describe Obama for years - but Trump certainly has many fascistic tendencies, so of course people are going to be wary.


Posted by Paradox Lost on Feb-06-2017 11:58:

quote:
Originally posted by Lira
I get the last bit and its good intentions, but I also find it troubling. To what extent can a member of a culture say that someone from another culture is(n't) eligible to adopt something?

Case in point, I'm Brazilian. We dress white clothes for New Year's Eve. This is, to the best of my knowledge, a tradition that comes from Candombl�, an Afro-Brazilian religion. So there you have something (1) with religious undertones and (2) specifically from my culture. Now, if I see a foreigner dressed in white clothes for NYE because they think it looks good and they're inspired by what they saw in Rio, is it my right to "protect" my culture? Or, as someone from a Catholic family, should I be insulted by the cathedral-shaped love hotels I saw in Japan?

I find it would be pretty prejudicial of me to complain about either case... But maybe I'm missing the point. (Am I?)


quote:
Originally posted by Lira
It's that I don't get what could be wrong about it. Does it really matter what another person is wearing if they're not out to harm anyone?


I don't think you're missing the point, I'm just suggesting a possibly larger angle from which to approach it. You've emphasized harm, offensiveness, and a type of cultural defensiveness all in light of what we commonly understand as appropriation, and while it's up to you and your sensibilities to determine how to react to the shallow, often irreverent mishandling of cultural/religious features (I doubt anyone's culture is realistically 'threatened' by the garden variety types of appropriation we've been discussing here), it just doesn't strike me as a particularly conscientious way by which to live in both a multi-cultural society and an increasingly globalized world. I couldn't detail specifically what kind of harm this causes, but the superficial attitudes from where this comes and plays into certainly can't help.


Posted by Paradox Lost on Feb-06-2017 12:09:

quote:
Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
That's the only difference between "cultural appropriation" and regular globalisation. I generally feel that "cultural appropriation" is often just a load of angry bollocks, wielded by people who are irate about white privilege and don't like white people doing what every culture does to every other culture in the 21st century.


I think that's certainly part of the difference, but it seems to me that the real meat of the distinction between the two is the way 'cultural appropriation' is more warped around the issue of identity. Take something as inoffensive as sushi. Anyone in any part of the world can learn to make sushi, buy sushi making appliances, and throw their own sushi parties- I can't imagine anyone would object to this as an act of cultural appropriation. Or take the example of the three piece suit, a piece of Western clothing that has since diffused all across the globe to the point where nearly all businessmen in all cultures can be seen wearing them. I think it's reasonable to qualify these as long standing examples of the way culture is imported and exported (though the difference between globalization and colonialism is an often murky one), and they're largely neutral because they've become part of a kind of cultural 'public domain' that has been divorced from a deep rooted sense of 'identity'.

So you contrast these examples with the recent outcry voiced by members of the Polynesian community over a line of children's Halloween costumes based on the character 'Moana,' which was a full body suit covered in tribal tattoos, and I think we can see a meaningful difference between globalized exchanges, and full-on appropriation of cultural features that are significant to its native members. It's also on that distinction that I don't think we can describe this and similar examples as just something that every culture does to every other culture in the 21st century, as it strikes me as a luxury of the privileged to commodify as 'exotic' things they're too insulated amongst other members of their class to have any informed exposure with.


Posted by Lews on Feb-06-2017 17:05:

quote:
Originally posted by Paradox Lost
I think that's certainly part of the difference, but it seems to me that the real meat of the distinction between the two is the way 'cultural appropriation' is more warped around the issue of identity. Take something as inoffensive as sushi. Anyone in any part of the world can learn to make sushi, buy sushi making appliances, and throw their own sushi parties- I can't imagine anyone would object to this as an act of cultural appropriation.


quote:
Students at Oberlin College are in an uproar about dining hall food. And no, it�s not because of the �mystery meat.�

In an article published last month in the campus newspaper, The Oberlin Review, students have deemed the university�s attempts at serving international cuisines�particularly of Asian nations and cultures�appropriative to the point of being patently racist. �This uninformed representation of cultural dishes has been noted by a multitude of students, many of who[m] have expressed concern over the gross manipulation of traditional recipes,� the paper wrote.

...

The worst offense was the sushi bar at Dascomb Dining Hall, which, according to Tomoyo Joshi, a Japanese junior at Oberlin, was appropriative due to the lack of fresh fish and grossly undercooked rice.

�When you�re cooking a country�s dish for other people, including ones who have never tried the original dish before, you�re also representing the meaning of the dish as well as its culture,� she told the Review. �So if people not from that heritage take food, modify it and serve it as �authentic,� it is appropriative.�


http://europe.newsweek.com/oberlin-...od-407466?rm=eu


Posted by Mr.Mystery on Feb-06-2017 17:36:


Posted by SYSTEM-J on Feb-06-2017 19:14:

quote:
Originally posted by Paradox Lost
It's also on that distinction that I don't think we can describe this and similar examples as just something that every culture does to every other culture in the 21st century, as it strikes me as a luxury of the privileged to commodify as 'exotic' things they're too insulated amongst other members of their class to have any informed exposure with.


You've more or less repeated what I said, and your example is extremely similar to mine. It's the attitude towards the thing being "appropriated" that's significant. This example is totally different to what Lews linked. Or the accusation I also read a lot, that the current popularity of yoga amongst "photogenic, thin, middle class white people" is a form of cultural appropriation.


Posted by Lira on Feb-06-2017 19:17:

quote:
Originally posted by wotyzoid
This argument is also still not airtight, Marcus, because nobody called Romney a fascist.

Maybe it wasn't quite as common, but this wasn't unheard of.

Quoting Ryan Lochte, maybe I'm overexaggerating - it's here in Brazil that I've grown sick and tired of hearing centrists being dubbed fascists by the left. Odds are I could be the effect of the very thing I'm warning against, and the word "fascist" here has been used to such an extent I'm now suffering from "denunciation fatigue".

Needless to say, now that there are also talks about a possible Trump coup, my first reaction is to ignore it as the relentless cries that there's been a coup in Brazil (and, mind you, I was against the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff, so it's not like I'm happy with the result).
quote:
Originally posted by wotyzoid
And, also, Bill is totally clueless about one thing. He says Romney wouldn't have changed our lives that much but how the fuck does he know? Good at his job ad he is, he still lives in a hollywood bubble, and it seems like he forgets that Trump's policies are what the GOP have been pushing for, for years now. If you bring up the environment for starters, another 4 years of GOP polute and cash in politics, whether it was under Trump or Romney, could, and I think will, have serious, irreparable effects if you ask me. Seriously, who knows what happens now?

I, for one, don't
quote:
Originally posted by Lews
Perhaps glib was not the best word, but I think you're being too quick to dismiss. The whole point about the 'crying wolf' story is that the boy was purposefully messing around with the adults and so of course they weren't going to take him seriously when he was being serious; this isn't a like situation - this is adults looking at a blurry shape in the distance that certainly appears to have a lot of fur and to be menacing sheep, and saying that it really looks like its a wolf, and perhaps we should be wary.

It's like I told Woty. Maybe I'm already suffering from "denunciation fatigue" myself. In the time span of a little over a year, I've heard everyone and their mothers being called "fascist", to the centrist president to the dean of my university.

The reason I likened it to be boy crying wolf is because it's been something of a rallying cry here not to mess around, but to garner support. Maybe it's the university bubble I find myself in, so calling someone a "fascist" is an easy way to get people behind you against them.
quote:
Originally posted by Lews
I do think we should be careful about labels and words - I find it hilariously ironic and sad that it appears the Conservatives have made Socialism a more attractive option in America, because they used the term to describe Obama for years - but Trump certainly has many fascistic tendencies, so of course people are going to be wary.

And I thoroughly agree with you the wariness is justified
quote:
Originally posted by Paradox Lost
I don't think you're missing the point, I'm just suggesting a possibly larger angle from which to approach it. You've emphasized harm, offensiveness, and a type of cultural defensiveness all in light of what we commonly understand as appropriation, and while it's up to you and your sensibilities to determine how to react to the shallow, often irreverent mishandling of cultural/religious features (I doubt anyone's culture is realistically 'threatened' by the garden variety types of appropriation we've been discussing here), it just doesn't strike me as a particularly conscientious way by which to live in both a multi-cultural society and an increasingly globalized world. I couldn't detail specifically what kind of harm this causes, but the superficial attitudes from where this comes and plays into certainly can't help.

Hmmm... Let me have a think. It would be dishonest of me to reply right away
quote:
Originally posted by Lews
http://europe.newsweek.com/oberlin-...od-407466?rm=eu

If only they knew what passes for sushi down here


Posted by SYSTEM-J on Feb-06-2017 19:29:

Let's get back to the programme.

"Artisanal". Do I have to say any more? Just fuck right off.


Posted by Silky Johnson on Feb-06-2017 19:31:

I got in a fight with some dumb cunt on an event page on FB once, because she condescendingly told everyone not to wear any kind of offensive costume like Native headdress etc. (even though the fucking theme was JUNGLE PARTY), and blathered on about cultural appropriation, blahblah. Fucking rich white entitled assholes telling other privileged assholes to mind their cultural appropriation is beyond fucking annoying. Like bitch, did you just graduate your sociology program? Fuck.


Posted by wotyzoid on Feb-06-2017 19:34:

quote:
Originally posted by Lira
Maybe it wasn't quite as common, but this wasn't unheard of.

Quoting Ryan Lochte, maybe I'm overexaggerating - it's here in Brazil that I've grown sick and tired of hearing centrists being dubbed fascists by the left. Odds are I could be the effect of the very thing I'm warning against, and the word "fascist" here has been used to such an extent I'm now suffering from "denunciation fatigue".

Needless to say, now that there are also talks about a possible Trump coup, my first reaction is to ignore it as the relentless cries that there's been a coup in Brazil (and, mind you, I was against the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff, so it's not like I'm happy with the result).


I get what you're saying. I guess I just don't think it's so outlandish to cry wolf now given this whole situation. And I'm glad you were against the Dilma impeachment, I was also, and I couldn't wrap my head around the fact that most of my family was for it. Temer and Cunha are like comic book villains to me.


Posted by on Feb-06-2017 20:56:

#Lady Gaga halftime show


Posted by planetaryplayer on Feb-06-2017 22:15:

Detective Dirk McDurk da Artisan esquire


Posted by Lira on Feb-07-2017 04:22:

45. Superfoods: I mean, come on! Unless it's a flying banana, or a glowing granola bar, it ain't super.

And, if your granola bar glows... it's better if you avoid it altogether.
quote:
Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
"Artisanal". Do I have to say any more?

No, wait, can we keep this one for a while just so foreigners pronounce it "art is anal"?

I know I did, and this will ensure it dies a quick but immaturely hilarious death. Think of all the 12-year-olds who'll benefit from this
quote:
Originally posted by wotyzoid
And I'm glad you were against the Dilma impeachment, I was also, and I couldn't wrap my head around the fact that most of my family was for it.

I guess you had to be here... And even then, it's hard to understand what happened.


Posted by Sushipunk on Feb-07-2017 10:19:

quote:
Originally posted by Lira
No, wait, can we keep this one for a while just so foreigners pronounce it "art is anal"?


I will probably never be able to read, or even hear, the word "artisanal" again, without without thinking of this now.

I love TA.


Posted by Mr.Mystery on Feb-07-2017 12:33:

quote:
Originally posted by Sushipunk
I will probably never be able to read, or even hear, the word "artisanal" again, without without thinking of this now.

I love TA.

Wait... what else could you possibly think?


Posted by on Feb-07-2017 15:16:

quote:
Originally posted by Lira
No, wait, can we keep this one for a while just so foreigners pronounce it "art is anal"?


Artichoke


Posted by Lira on Feb-07-2017 20:34:

32. Silhouette meaning trainers. As a stingy hypebeast (if such a thing exists), I like reading about sneakers I'll never buy but, for crying out loud, there are so many words you can use instead of "shoes". Silhouette isn't one of them, stahp!
quote:
Originally posted by Jon_Snow


Artichoke

Misread this one too, as expected

My favourite mispronunciation is a friend of mine who got laughed at by his classmates in DC for saying a hyperbole was a hyperball


Posted by on Feb-07-2017 21:55:

I'm a native speaker and my first attempt came out hyper-bowl, which also elicited much mirth.

But don't you love the word sneaker. It's got to be least pretentious word I can think of. Besides it sounds like what it is.


Posted by DJ RANN on Feb-08-2017 02:54:

quote:
Originally posted by Jon_Snow
I'm a native speaker and my first attempt came out hyper-bowl, which also elicited much mirth.

But don't you love the word sneaker. It's got to be least pretentious word I can think of. Besides it sounds like what it is.


Ugh, "sneaker".

It sounds like what it is? Like footwear for paedos?

It's a fucking pair of trainers.


Pages (6): « 1 2 [3] 4 5 6 »

Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright © 2000-2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.